The last Viking King: A royal maternity case solved by ancient DNA analysis

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The last Viking King : A royal maternity case solved by ancient DNA analysis. / Dissing, J.; Binladen, J.; Hansen, Anders J.; Sejrsen, B.; Willerslev, E.; Lynnerup, N.

I: Forensic Science International, Bind 166, Nr. 1, 2007, s. 21-7.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Dissing, J, Binladen, J, Hansen, AJ, Sejrsen, B, Willerslev, E & Lynnerup, N 2007, 'The last Viking King: A royal maternity case solved by ancient DNA analysis', Forensic Science International, bind 166, nr. 1, s. 21-7.

APA

Dissing, J., Binladen, J., Hansen, A. J., Sejrsen, B., Willerslev, E., & Lynnerup, N. (2007). The last Viking King: A royal maternity case solved by ancient DNA analysis. Forensic Science International, 166(1), 21-7.

Vancouver

Dissing J, Binladen J, Hansen AJ, Sejrsen B, Willerslev E, Lynnerup N. The last Viking King: A royal maternity case solved by ancient DNA analysis. Forensic Science International. 2007;166(1):21-7.

Author

Dissing, J. ; Binladen, J. ; Hansen, Anders J. ; Sejrsen, B. ; Willerslev, E. ; Lynnerup, N. / The last Viking King : A royal maternity case solved by ancient DNA analysis. I: Forensic Science International. 2007 ; Bind 166, Nr. 1. s. 21-7.

Bibtex

@article{ff2f01e09d0d11debc73000ea68e967b,
title = "The last Viking King: A royal maternity case solved by ancient DNA analysis",
abstract = "The last of the Danish Viking Kings, Sven Estridsen, died in A.D. 1074 and is entombed in Roskilde Cathedral with other Danish viking kings and queens. Sven's mother, Estrid, is entombed in a pillar across the chancel. However, while there is no reasonable doubt about the identity of Sven, there have been doubts among historians whether the woman entombed was indeed Estrid. To shed light on this problem, we have extracted and analysed mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from pulp of teeth from each of the two royals. Four overlapping DNA-fragments covering about 400 bp of hypervariable region 1 (HVR-1) of the D-loop were PCR amplified, cloned and a number of clones with each segment were sequenced. Also a segment containing the H/non-H specific nucleotide 7028 was sequenced. Consensus sequences were determined and D-loop results were replicated in an independent laboratory. This allowed the assignment of King Sven Estridsen to haplogroup H; Estrid's sequence differed from that of Sven at two positions in HVR-1, 16093T -> C and 16304T -> C, indicating that she belongs to subgroup H5a. Given the maternal inheritance of mtDNA, offspring will have the same mtDNA sequence as their mother with the exception of rare cases where the sequence has been altered by a germ line mutation. Therefore, the observation of two sequence differences makes it highly unlikely that the entombed woman was the mother of Sven. In addition, physical examination of the skeleton and the teeth strongly indicated that this woman was much younger (approximately 35 years) at the time of death than the 70 years history records tell. Although the entombed woman cannot be the Estrid, she may well be one of Sven's two daughters-in-law who were also called Estrid and who both became queens. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved. Udgivelsesdato: 2007 Feb 14",
author = "J. Dissing and J. Binladen and Hansen, {Anders J.} and B. Sejrsen and E. Willerslev and N. Lynnerup",
note = "141UT Times Cited:3 Cited References Count:30",
year = "2007",
language = "Dansk",
volume = "166",
pages = "21--7",
journal = "Forensic Science International",
issn = "0379-0738",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The last Viking King

T2 - A royal maternity case solved by ancient DNA analysis

AU - Dissing, J.

AU - Binladen, J.

AU - Hansen, Anders J.

AU - Sejrsen, B.

AU - Willerslev, E.

AU - Lynnerup, N.

N1 - 141UT Times Cited:3 Cited References Count:30

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - The last of the Danish Viking Kings, Sven Estridsen, died in A.D. 1074 and is entombed in Roskilde Cathedral with other Danish viking kings and queens. Sven's mother, Estrid, is entombed in a pillar across the chancel. However, while there is no reasonable doubt about the identity of Sven, there have been doubts among historians whether the woman entombed was indeed Estrid. To shed light on this problem, we have extracted and analysed mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from pulp of teeth from each of the two royals. Four overlapping DNA-fragments covering about 400 bp of hypervariable region 1 (HVR-1) of the D-loop were PCR amplified, cloned and a number of clones with each segment were sequenced. Also a segment containing the H/non-H specific nucleotide 7028 was sequenced. Consensus sequences were determined and D-loop results were replicated in an independent laboratory. This allowed the assignment of King Sven Estridsen to haplogroup H; Estrid's sequence differed from that of Sven at two positions in HVR-1, 16093T -> C and 16304T -> C, indicating that she belongs to subgroup H5a. Given the maternal inheritance of mtDNA, offspring will have the same mtDNA sequence as their mother with the exception of rare cases where the sequence has been altered by a germ line mutation. Therefore, the observation of two sequence differences makes it highly unlikely that the entombed woman was the mother of Sven. In addition, physical examination of the skeleton and the teeth strongly indicated that this woman was much younger (approximately 35 years) at the time of death than the 70 years history records tell. Although the entombed woman cannot be the Estrid, she may well be one of Sven's two daughters-in-law who were also called Estrid and who both became queens. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved. Udgivelsesdato: 2007 Feb 14

AB - The last of the Danish Viking Kings, Sven Estridsen, died in A.D. 1074 and is entombed in Roskilde Cathedral with other Danish viking kings and queens. Sven's mother, Estrid, is entombed in a pillar across the chancel. However, while there is no reasonable doubt about the identity of Sven, there have been doubts among historians whether the woman entombed was indeed Estrid. To shed light on this problem, we have extracted and analysed mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from pulp of teeth from each of the two royals. Four overlapping DNA-fragments covering about 400 bp of hypervariable region 1 (HVR-1) of the D-loop were PCR amplified, cloned and a number of clones with each segment were sequenced. Also a segment containing the H/non-H specific nucleotide 7028 was sequenced. Consensus sequences were determined and D-loop results were replicated in an independent laboratory. This allowed the assignment of King Sven Estridsen to haplogroup H; Estrid's sequence differed from that of Sven at two positions in HVR-1, 16093T -> C and 16304T -> C, indicating that she belongs to subgroup H5a. Given the maternal inheritance of mtDNA, offspring will have the same mtDNA sequence as their mother with the exception of rare cases where the sequence has been altered by a germ line mutation. Therefore, the observation of two sequence differences makes it highly unlikely that the entombed woman was the mother of Sven. In addition, physical examination of the skeleton and the teeth strongly indicated that this woman was much younger (approximately 35 years) at the time of death than the 70 years history records tell. Although the entombed woman cannot be the Estrid, she may well be one of Sven's two daughters-in-law who were also called Estrid and who both became queens. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved. Udgivelsesdato: 2007 Feb 14

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 166

SP - 21

EP - 27

JO - Forensic Science International

JF - Forensic Science International

SN - 0379-0738

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 14302860